Günther Uecker
, Wendorf, Germany — Lives and works in Düsseldorf, Germany
About Günther Uecker
The artist's first nail pictures were created towards the end of the 1950s and stemmed from an earlier trauma. During the War, Uecker boarded up the windows of his family home with wooden planks to protect them from possible attacks. The aggressive act of hammering nails into planks to keep the inside of the house sheltered inspired Uecker to tell the story of his — and the world’s — trauma.
For Uecker, art is like the traces of wounds ploughed into the field. In this, the nail symbolises the paradox of ‘healing by hurting’. The spatial reality created by the nails is meant to overcome the personal gesture and to generate the necessary conditions for freedom. Later in his oeuvre, the nail became more of a meditative object, a focal point to concentrate on.
The progress of the shadow that forms is also connected with the feeling that as each day passes one yields to the embrace of night until the next morning and that terrible moment when I, as an individual, cast a shadow of my own and find myself alone in the universe. It was that same existential terror that prompted me to make works that render visible the never-ending movement that is only halted for the short moment when a nail is hit.